OPINION
A jury convicted appellant Tommy Ja-vone Seamster of one count of aggravated robbery and assessed punishment at twenty years’ imprisonment. Appellant moved
Background
At about 10:00 a.m. on December 26, 2009, two men entered the convenience store of a Shell gas station where Sonny Singh worked. One of the robbers, with his face exposed at first, pointed a gun at Singh and demanded all the money. The robbers fled with the money from the cash register. Later that day, Deputy Craig Berry of the Hams County Sheriffs Office apprehended appellant and codefendant DeAndre Parker and brought them back to the scene of the crime. Among other evidence the State presented at trial, Deputy Alejandro Adames testified that Singh positively identified appellant during a show-up identification. Singh testified that he was “sure” about the show-up identification. He also made an in-court identification, implicating appellant as one of the two robbers. The jury found appellant guilty.
After trial, appellate counsel filed a motion for new trial alleging that trial counsel Patrick Ruzzo rendered ineffective assistance because he failed to conduct an investigation that would have revealed a video showing Singh’s failure to pick appellant’s picture from a photo spread. The trial court held a hearing on the motion. Sabrina Green testified that she was assisting with the production of a television show called “The Defendant” for a television production company. The production company obtained information pertaining to appellant’s case from his bonding company, and the production company recorded a video of an interview with Singh in May 2010.
During the interview, Singh was asked if he could identify either of the robbers if provided with an array of photos. 1 Singh responded, “I think I should be able to.” The video reflects the following exchange with approximate timestamps noted:
Interviewer [0:09]: So, I’m going to show you some pictures that may or may not be the person. Uh, and you just kind of point out.
Singh [0:14]: Ah, I’ll try my best. It’s been so long I haven’t remembered that, you know, at that time I told them on that day I was so certain, but it’s been over five months, but I’ll try my best if I can.
[At 0:32, the interviewer lays out five individual photos on the counter, and Singh begins looking at the photos.]
Singh [0:37]: [Pointing to one photo.] Not this guy.
Singh [0:50]: I think he was, um.
Singh [1:03]: I [inaudible] want to be 100% sure which one was it that day.
LI-
Interviewer [1:07]: He may or may not be there at all.
Singh [1:10]: Yeah, that, that’s what I’m saying. I’m not 100% sure.
Singh [1:15]: [Not indicating.] That guy, no. Not that one.
Singh [1:19]: I’m not 100% sure out of these ones. I don’t want to just pinpoint at somebody and say that was it.
[At 1:26, Singh furrows his brow for a moment as if puzzled or concentrating intently.]
Singh [1:36]: I don’t want to make any guesses on these ones. I think it wasn’t that guy. [Indicating to the photo previously excluded.]
Singh [1:47]: [Singh stops looking at photos.] I don’t want to make any guesses.
The photo spread included one photo of appellant and one photo of Parker. From timestamp 0:82, when the photos are placed on the counter, to 1:47, Singh does not appear to take his eyes off the photos.
After the interview, Green left a voice-mail for Ruzzo, saying that she “had information in regards to Tommy Seamster’s hearing.” The record does not reflect whether Ruzzo received or listened to the message, but he testified that he did not learn about the production company’s interview with Singh until immediately after trial when appellant’s mother told him about the video. Appellant’s mother testified that she told Ruzzo about the video five or six times prior to trial. Appellant testified that he told Ruzzo, “We have information [that] could help in my case,” but he did not specifically mention the photo spread, video, or television production company. Parker’s lawyers learned of the video’s existence from Parker’s family, and one of his lawyers testified that they would have obtained a copy of the video if Parker’s case had gone to trial. 2 Ruzzo did not recall speaking with Parker’s lawyers, though he may have done so once in the courtroom.
Finally, Ruzzo testified that he did not send his investigator to the scene of the crime to interview Singh. However, Ruzzo testified that he interviewed Singh prior to trial, and Singh told Ruzzo that Singh “could identify the person in the robbery.” At trial, Singh testified that he did not talk to Ruzzo before trial.
The trial court denied appellant’s motion for new trial, and this appeal followed.
Analysis
Appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion for new trial. In particular, appellant argues (1) Ruzzo was deficient by failing to adequately investigate his case, which resulted in Ruzzo’s inability to impeach Singh’s identification testimony with the television production company’s video, and (2) this failure to investigate caused appellant prejudice by undermining confidence in the outcome of the trial.
To prevail on an ineffective assistance claim, an appellant must show that (1) counsel’s performance was deficient by falling below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2) counsel’s deficiency caused the appellant prejudice — there is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome that but for counsel’s errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.
Strickland v. Washington,
When, as here, the prejudice prong of the
Strickland
test is dispositive, we need address only that prong on appeal.
See My Thi Tien v. State,
To determine whether an appellant has established prejudice based on counsel’s failure to investigate and introduce evidence, we look to the totality of the evidence to determine whether there is a reasonable probability — one sufficient to undermine our confidence in the verdict— that but for counsel’s failure to investigate and obtain certain evidence, the jury “would have had a reasonable doubt respecting guilt.”
Strickland,
Accordingly, two important considerations are (1) the overall strength of the State’s case and (2) the potential value to the defense of the undiscovered evidence.
See Perez,
Here, the overall strength of the State’s case against appellant is neither “weak” nor “overwhelming,” but somewhere in the middle.
4
In addition to Singh’s on-scene
In greater detail, the State presented the following evidence:
• Elliot Turner testified that at about 9:38 a.m. on December 26, 2009, he observed two black males stealing his black Dodge Intrepid near his apartment on Aldine Bender Road. One of the men used a screwdriver to steal the Intrepid, while the other man sat in a “goldish, tannish color” Buick Park Avenue. The man in the Buick showed Turner a gun and said, among other things, “It’s our car now.” At a show-up identification later that day, Turner “clearly” identified Parker as the man with the screwdriver. Turner also made a tentative identification of appellant as the man with the gun in the gold Buick. 5 A few days later, Turner picked both appellant and Parker out of photo spreads and noted that appellant was the man with the gun sitting in the gold Buick. Finally, Turner made an in-court identification of appellant as the man with the gun in the gold Buick.
• Singh testified that he was robbed at about 10:00 a.m. while he worked at a Shell gas station located at the intersection of Beltway 8 and Veteran Road. Singh identified the color, make, and model of the getaway vehicle as a black Dodge Intrepid, and he recorded the license plate as PZK 994. He gave this information to police shortly after the robbery. Later that day, both appellant and Parker were brought to the scene of the crime, and Singh identified appellant as the robber with a gun. Singh did not identify Parker as one of the robbers. Singh also made an in-court identification of appellant as the robber with the gun.
• Meybel Guvera testified that she was working at a different Shell gas station located at the intersection of Beltway 8 and Tidwell Road. During the morning on December 26, 2009, two black men robbed her. One of the menwaved a gun in her face. Later that day, she identified appellant as one of the robbers during a show-up identification. She also made an in-court identification of appellant as the robber with the gun.
• Kenedy Munguia testified that he was at the intersection of Tidwell Road and Van Hut at some point between 11:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. on December 26, 2009. He observed a “bluish black” Dodge Intrepid drive off the side of the roadway and crash. Two black men exited the Intrepid, ran across a road, and entered a “brownish, goldish color four door” Buick. Munguia noticed that the Buick had a white cardboard or paper license plate on the rear, and he did not remember seeing a license plate on the front. Munguia called police to report the incident, and later that day, he was asked to drive to a Shell gas station to identify the men running from the Intrepid. During a show-up identification, Munguia identified appellant as one of the men running from the Intrepid and entering the Buick. He also made an in-court identification of appellant as one of the men. The abandoned Intrepid that Munguia observed was later recovered by police; the license plate was RZK 884.
• Deputy Craig Berry testified that he was driving on Tidwell Road when he observed a gold Buick parked near a convenience store. He noticed that the Buick had a paper license plate on the back and no front license plate. As appellant and Parker exited the store in the direction of the Buick, Deputy Berry and another deputy intervened. The deputies brought appellant and Parker to the Shell gas stations for the show-up identifications discussed above. 6
In evaluating the strength of the State’s case, we also note the State did not introduce any of the following into evidence: a gun, stolen proceeds, a mask or sweatshirt the robber with the gun wore during the robbery, or any forensic evidence linking appellant to the Intrepid or the crime scene.
Next, we consider the potential value of the undiscovered evidence — a video showing that Singh was unable or unwilling
7
to pick appellant’s photo out of a photo spread — and weigh the totality of evidence against the State’s evidence. Appellant
The type of impeachment evidence at issue in this case, where Singh was either unable or unwilling to identify appellant in a photo spread administered by a television production crew rather than law enforcement, is markedly different from the very clear “undiscovered witness” exculpatory evidence at issue in the ineffective assistance cases cited above. The impeachment evidence at issue in this case is more similar to the type of evidence that an investigative State agency would collect: a witness’s failure or refusal to make an identification before trial. In some cases, the State does not turn over such impeachment evidence to a defendant in violation of
Brady v. Maryland,
We acknowledge that “eyewitness testimony is highly regarded by juries, rather
In analyzing the issue before us, we focus on whether there is a reasonable probability that the jury would have had a reasonable doubt respecting guilt if Ruzzo had obtained and used the impeachment evidence. In
Lindsey v. King,
a case of “agonizing closeness,” the Fifth Circuit reversed the defendant’s conviction when two eyewitnesses identified the defendant as the murderer, but the State withheld impeachment evidence relating to only one of the witnesses.
In
Kyles v. Whitley,
the Supreme Court similarly reversed a defendant’s conviction for murder when the State presented four eyewitnesses who made a positive identification of the defendant as the perpetrator.
The Court reasoned in
Kyles,
however, that it was the cumulative effect of the undisclosed impeachment evidence — which tainted both the identification of the defendant as the murderer and the physical evidence linking him to the crime — that created a “significantly weaker case” for the State, mandating reversal.
Id.
at 454,
Four years later, the Court reached a different result when the State withheld evidence that could have “severely impeached” the State’s eyewitness who “provided the only disinterested, narrative account” of the defendant’s abduction of the murder victim.
Strickler v. Greene,
The Court in
Strickler
noted the “obvious significance” of the witness’s testimony,
id.
at 296,
But we think the sequence of events is important: Singh initially made an in-person identification of appellant, and only later was Singh unable or unwilling to make an identification from a photo spread. In the Lindsey, Kyles, and Strickler decisions, the eyewitnesses were first unable to make an identification (or made impeaching statements related to identification) and only later did they completely contradict their earlier statements. The fact that the unsuccessful identification occurred after the positive identification bears on the lesser weight of the impeachment evidence. Further, Singh did not completely contradict the initial on-scene identification. The State correctly notes that Singh never stated during the interview that he could not identify appellant as the robber. Singh even bolstered his prior identification during the interview — he reiterated that he was “so certain” of his positive identification on the day of the crime.
Due to the general persuasiveness of eyewitness testimony, we recognize there is a possibility the result of the trial would have been different if counsel had discovered and used the impeachment evidence in this case. But “possibility” is not the standard. When we weigh the totality of evidence against the State’s evidence, we are not convinced that there is a reasonable probability — sufficient to undermine our confidence in the verdict — that but for counsel’s failure to discover and use the impeachment evidence, the jury would have had a reasonable doubt respecting guilt.
Accordingly, appellant’s sole issue is overruled, and the trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. The relevant portion of the video and the photos displayed in the video were admitted into evidence during the hearing and are part of the record on appeal.
. The case against Parker was dismissed prior to trial.
. Appellant acknowledged at oral argument that we should defer to the trial court’s implied factual findings based on conflicts in the evidence. We assume that Ruzzo interviewed Singh prior to trial. We also assume that Ruzzo was not specifically told about the existence of the video before the jury rendered its verdict. Specifically, we disagree with appellant’s assertions that "the videotape of such interview with the complainant was made known to defense counsel, ... and [counsel] did not contact the complainant, either himself or through an investigator, until trial started.”
.
Compare Anderson,
. Turner explained, "His lips were familiar but I guess in the car he — I thought he was a little brighter than he actually was in person. I was really only able to identify the car and his muscle shirt and his lips I remembered. But I did think he was a little brighter than he came out to be.”
. Appellant testified that Parker drove him to this convenience store in Parker’s gold Buick Park Avenue.
. The State argues in its brief that the video "does not prove that Mr. Singh could not identify appellant.” Similarly, at oral argument, the State argued that the video does not "conclusively prove” that Singh was "unable” to identify appellant. The State is correct, but our review of the undiscovered evidence is not limited to what the evidence "proves.” We consider the evidence in a broader light, looking to what conclusions a jury could draw from the evidence.
See Kyles,
.
See, e.g., Anderson,
.
Johnson v. Scott,
.
See also Lindsey,
. The evidence included hair similar to the defendant's found at the crime scene, the defendant's possession of the victim’s personal belongings, an eyewitness placing the defendant near the scene of the crime, blood on the defendant’s clothes, an accomplice’s wallet
